On 2012-07-06 21:42, David Nadlinger wrote:
On Friday, 6 July 2012 at 09:38:13 UTC, Jacob Carlborg wrote:
It will not prevent the compiler for generating calls to the runtime.
It should – TypeInfo references will still be generated, though.
So what happens with code like this:
auto o = new
On Saturday, 7 July 2012 at 03:02:07 UTC, akaz wrote:
On Friday, 6 July 2012 at 21:10:56 UTC, Simon wrote:
On 06/07/2012 16:39, Alex Rønne Petersen wrote:
Never mind what D says, even in C/C++ just doing the p += 10
is invalid.
Creating a pointer that points at invalid memory is just as
wron
Yeah invoking the linker manually works fine.
To save me from that each time i've actually added '-L-lphobos2'
to the end of 'DFLAGS' in '/etc/dmd.conf' so phobos is always
before curl in the linker argument list. When the program is
compiled '-L-lphobos2' appears twice in the args but that's
What was the reason for not including 'std.net.curl' in the
Windows phobos library? I've added it and recompiled phobos for
use but i just wondered why it was missing?
For others i blogged how to recompile with curl support here:
http://kalekold.net/index.php?post=19
On Jul 7, 2012 8:45 AM, "Gary Willoughby" wrote:
>
> What was the reason for not including 'std.net.curl' in the Windows
phobos library?
IIRC it is licencing issues, they can't include curl in the distribution
without certain requirements that were deemed to awkward to implement.
IIRC it is licencing issues, they can't include curl in the
distribution
without certain requirements that were deemed to awkward to
implement.
Ah, right.
So iv just been getting into D programming, im liking it alot so
far but i have come across one issue that i am unable to find a
solution for.
Basically whenever i use readf(); to gather console input it wont
run the program if there is code afterwards.
Here is an example:
import std.stdio
On 07/07/2012 03:35 PM, Mr. P-teo wrote:
> Basically whenever i use readf(); to gather console input it wont run
> the program if there is code afterwards.
readf() does not automatically consume the end-of-line character.
> That works fine, but if i try and imput 2 numbers to seperate variables
Well, then we're going to have to agree to disagree on that
one. While some
design decisions may have made more sense at the time they were
made or the
ultimate pros and cons may not have been clear at the time, I
think that zero-
terminated strings are one of the design decisions which was
tru